Thursday, July 30, 2015

Thanks for returning to the 2015 Summer Library Series, in which writers share their childhood memories of the library every Thursday, all summer long here at What She Might Think. Our July travels began in Philadelphia and end in the hot sun of Texas with this week's featured writer, Emilia Rodriguez. Please enjoy!

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"What is it about Empty Swimming Pools?" photo by Peter Shelk,
Used under CC license

This Book: One Weekby Emilia Rodriguez

﻿

﻿

Emilia Rodriguez as a child,Used with author's permission

We didn’t stay in places very long
when I was young.My parents were born
in Mexico.My father was not a U.S.
citizen.We moved to Fort Worth, TX when
I was in the first grade.Until then,
all of my classes had been bilingual. Spanish
was my first language.My English was
shaky.I could read a little and watch
cartoons, but holding a conversation was difficult.

On my first day of school, I had a migraine. I watched the teacher become more and more
frustrated as I struggled to tell her I needed to see the nurse.My lacking vocabulary, and the anxiety of
being in a roomful of strangers didn't make it any easier.

"She needs to go to the bathroom!" one
of the girls offered.I nodded and the
teacher pointed to the clock.She
explained that I should be back by the time the red hand went around the clock
three times.I nodded again and left to
find the nurse's office.I made it
halfway down the hall before I saw the library.

The library was big, colorful, a toy store I’d
never been to before.It made me forget I
had a headache or even a head.From
behind the glass doors, I saw a book with a picture of a coconut palm tree and
words like music on the cover,Chicka Chicka Boom Boom.

I knew I wasn’t supposed to be in the
library, so I took the book and crawled under a table.I didn’t care that it was dark or that I’d be
in trouble if I was caught.I felt happy
because I wasn't struggling to communicate or keep up.Eventually, the girl who’d sent me to the
bathroom found me.She said the teacher
was upset and wanted me to come back, but all I wanted was to stay.

We moved again when I was in second
grade, to a border town called Roma, Texas.Roma is located in Starr County, the poorest county in Texas, so you
shouldn’t be
surprised to hear that its library was a trailer hitched by the public
pool.My aunt used to take me there on
weekends. I loved it.I got my first
library card there. Blue card stock, typewriter ink, and the feeling of
belonging. I remember walking around knowing it was in my pocket and feeling
like a grown-up.I had all these new
responsibilities.I had to meet the
reading deadlines and make sure I didn’t lose the borrowed books.It was a promise.

I felt like I broke that promise when my aunt
drove me to a library in Mcallen, TX.It
was the biggest library I’d ever seen, complete with spiral staircases and more
children's books than I had remaining days of childhood to read them.At first I was happy just to be there, but
that feeling soured when I remembered my promise to belong to the other
library.When I asked my aunt about it,
she explained that I could borrow books here, too.She explained that this library was
Public.It belonged to everyone.

That day I remember bringing home a book about
Ramona Quimby.In it, Ramona squeezed
out an entire tube of toothpaste into the sink.It was something I had always wanted to do.As I read it, I felt my hands squeeze at the
tube of paste, making a twisted rope of red, white, and blue mint.Afterward, Ramona’s wastefulness was
discovered, and she was severely scolded by her mother.I felt Ramona’s joy turn into regret.She was punished by having to scoop the
toothpaste into a plastic bag and use it every day.The toothpaste fiasco was meant to be a
lesson for me, and children everywhere.Our parents have worked hard for the American Dream, so don't squander
your privilege, however small it may feel.It was a good first choice of book, because each time I returned for a
new one, it was done with the bewilderment of someone having survived the Great
Depression.I had the awareness of
owning something in excess and having the responsibility to ration. This
toothpaste: one month.This book: one
week.

*

Emilia Rodriguez, used with author's permission

Emilia
Rodriguez is a native Texan and a graduate of Texas State University where she
is now an MFA candidate in Fiction.She
has previously been published in Cleaver Magazine and Hypertrophic Literary.She currently lives in San Marcos, Texas with
her husband, and is working on her first novel.

If this is your first time travelling with the Summer Library Series, you can catch up by visiting all the places we've been this July: Philadelphia, Washington, Switzerland, and Iowa. Past seasons of the series are housed here. The series will continue through August, so please check back next Thursday, and share with friends and strangers until then.

Thursday, July 23, 2015

It's a dizzying time of travels this summer here at What She Might Think, from Philadelphia to Washington to Switzerland, and this week, to the rural fields of Iowa. Please enjoy this week's reflection of growing up in the library by singer, songwriter, and essayist, Liz Rognes.

Summers
in Lake Mills, Iowa meant long, hazy, humid days. My mom would drop my ﻿﻿siblings
and me off at the town pool for morning swimming lessons, two miles away from
our farm, and then we would walk a few blocks to my grandma’s house, wrapped in
our towels, our skin smelling of chlorine and salty sweat. My Grandma Bea was an
Irish Catholic Democrat, the kind who fervently believed in social justice and
local participation. She was on the Board of Directors for the public library,
and she or my mom would take us every week for story hour or just to check out
books. When we were old enough, we could walk by ourselves from Grandma’s house
to the library across the street: a small, unassuming building on the outside,
but on the inside filled to the brim with books and stories about the big,
exciting, incomprehensible world outside of our little Iowa farm town.﻿﻿

I
was a kid from a small, fairly conservative town in the middle of the country, but
I learned about political history, dissent, revolution, magic, ghosts, outer
space, and wild new ways of thinking from books. My favorite books were the
ones that sparked controversy, the ones that my teachers sometimes talked about
with a spectrum of thinly veiled to explicit disapproval. I remember lying on
the musty, familiar carpet of the school library sometime in middle school,
reading Go Ask Alice, when a teacher
interrupted me to ask if my parents would approve of a “book like that.” But I
had already read lots of books “like that”: a quick perusal of the ALA’s list
of most often challenged books in the 1990s reminds me of many of my favorite
books as a preteen and teenager: The
Handmaid’s Tale; Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret; Catcher in the Rye;
Carrie; and so forth. I loved reading books with teen and female
protagonists; I could relate to teenage girl angst, and, even though I was a
quiet, “good” kid, I felt a tacit, political alignment with the outliers and
rebels in the stories I read. My parents encouraged me to read and to read
anything; the only censorship I remember from my parents came around the time I
developed insomnia as a result of reading a collection of horror stories. The
book mysteriously disappeared, a phenomenon I first attributed to a poltergeist,
but then I realized that the thief had been my own mother, motivated by the
desire to protect me from my own imagination.

As
a younger kid, I loved browsing the shelves of the library, looking at the
covers and titles and imagining the people and places that lived inside of each
compact rectangle. I was a daydreamer and an eager traveler; it took very
little for me to be launched into narrative transport: one moment I would be a
kid in a sticky swimming suit and the next I would be Nancy Drew, bravely
exploring haunted mansions, piecing together a puzzle of clues, and helping the
families of the dead. I especially loved series of books; I loved the extended
narratives and the way that I could grow up right along with the characters if
I caught a series at the right time.﻿﻿﻿
﻿

I
would take library books with me everywhere I went. I read at the pool,
Grandma’s house, car trips, gym class, and all corners of the farm where I
lived. I would sit under a row of evergreen trees, curl up with the dog in the
old chicken house-turned dusty storage shed, or I would sprawl out on top of a
stack of hay bales in the stables and read while listening to the familiar huffs
and stomps of the horses. I loved—and still love—the option to vacate my own
life for a while, to disappear into someone else’s story.

My
own sense of social justice and local activism has been informed by my love for
reading, by developing empathy and understanding through narrative. Public
libraries have played a big role in this development, and I am thankful that my
parents and my grandma were such supporters of our local library and supporters
of access to a variety of books.

Four
years ago, I fell in love with a public librarian—not because of his
librarianship, but because of his big heart, his patience, his creativity and
sense of humor, his intellect: all things that make him a wonderful librarian,
too. We have a one-year old son who already loves the library. Our son loves
being around other kids and grown-ups, he loves picking out books and going to
story time, and he loves visiting Dada at work. My Grandma Bea didn’t live to
meet my partner or my son, but our little family carries on her love for
libraries, knowledge, and local participation.

*

﻿

Liz Rognes,
Photo Used with Author's Permission

Liz Rognes is a writer and folk musician who lives in Spokane with her partner Jason and their son Nelson. She performs widely, from Washington to Minnesota, and teaches at Eastern Washington University. Her newest album is Topographies. She's also a contributing blogger for the Emily Program. For more information about Liz, and to listen to samples of her music, please visit her website http://lizrognes.com/

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Welcome back! It's the third Thursday of July and time for the third reflection in the 2015 Summer Library Series. This summer's season began in Philadelphia, travelled through the rural towns of Washington, and now crosses over to Switzerland. Please enjoy this memory by author Regi Claire, who takes us into her childhood by way of a small school's attic library.

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Primarschule Mūnchwilen,
Photo by Roland Zumbuehl

Cigarettes and Astrid Lindgren

by Regi Claire﻿﻿

Regi Claire as a child,
Used with author's permission

When I was eight, I read a whole library. A library? Yes. Housed in a small attic room with a combed ceiling, up a steep flight of wooden stairs from the stone-flagged second floor of my village primary school. But why the sink and cupboards? Why the thick cigarette smoke? Well, the library must have been an afterthought.﻿﻿

First and foremost, the room was for the staff. The table was always littered with debris after the teachers' mid-morning break: full ashtrays, empty cups, a coffee pot, milk jug, spilt sugar–and, best of all, a plate of leftover cookies. Out of the whole week, Saturdays were the only days we kids, or at least a couple of us, were allowed into that smoky sanctum. And, boy, didn’t we fight for it!

Picture the little girl then, with her straight hair and almost-straight frock, dashing off her arithmetic exercises extra-quick to be eligible for the cookies–and the books that would make her head reel with magic. Luckily, my maths skills were up to scratch.‘Off you go, Regula (the tedious version of my name). And you too, Karoline.’

Generally it wasgirls who got chosen–probably because our hands were marginally cleaner…You didn’t think we were sent upstairs simply to have fun, did you? Pleasures are usually dampened by duties, in our case by soap suds. The water, which our teacher would run into the sink before leaving us to do the washing-up, was so hot that when you plunged in your hands they came out looking boiled. At least this made us feel grown up.

The school library consisted of two long shelves above the counter and sink. And so, after tidying away the dried cups, spoons and saucers and polishing off the last of the cookies, we would climb the short ladder to check out the books. We loved fantasy, adventure and romance. Authors such as Astrid Lindgren, Ottfried Preussler, Erich Kästner, Klaus Held, Lisa Tetzner and Federica de Cesco were among our favourites. We knew we didn’t have much time before the teacher returned to take us back to the classroom, but for the few minutes up on that ladder under the eaves, choosing our booty, we were the happiest schoolkids on earth.

That was how, to my mind, dish-washing became synonymous with libraries and cookies. These days my husband reads to me while I plunge my hands into the suds after dinner. By now we must have shared close to two hundred books–far too many to fit into that little library at my old primary school!

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Regi Clairegrew up in Switzerland and now lives in Scotland. She speaks four languages and is the author of four books of fiction, all written in English: Inside~Outside(1998),The Beauty Room(2002),Fighting It(2009), andThe Waiting(2012). She has twice been shortlisted for a Saltire

Regi Claire,
photograph by Mike Knowles

Scottish Book of the Year award. One of her stories was selected forBest British Short Stories 2013. A former Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, she is now a newly appointed Royal Literary Fund Lector for Reading Round Scotland. She is married to poet and novelist Ron Butlin. You can read several of her stories online, such as "The Tasting" and "Fighting It." To learn more about her and her work, please visitwww.regiclaire.com.

Books by authors in the Summer Library Series will link directly to author-friendly sites, such as the press itself or to the international library search engine, Worldcat.org.Please support small publishers, independent bookstores, and our libraries.

Thursday, July 9, 2015

We're in the second week of the 2015 Summer Library Series, where each Thursday brings us a new writer reflecting on his or her childhood in the library. This week, we're moving from a branch library in Philadelphia to a mobile library in Washington State.

Dedicated readers of the series may remember a travelling library in England that we learned about in the first season in Dan Powell's piece, "The Library Delivered." This week's installment will change the landscape where the books travelled, but not the pleasure of finding them when they stopped. Please enjoy Maya Jewell Zeller's memories of the mobile, rural Washington lending libraries. Enjoy!

Where my family lived
wasn’t a town. It was a series of backroads off Rural Route 4, a river bend
tourists would have driven past—or did—if it wasn’t for their interest in the
covered bridge, promised like a Meryl Streep movie, if you take the turn indicated
and head down the hill, past the tangle of maple and alder, sword fern and salmonberry, through the field of hay grass and thistle with the nettled edge.

I didn’t know what a RomCom was, or really much about
American culture beyond our valleys. But once a week, my mother took us to the
library van in Naselle, a fifteen-minute drive from where we lived. I thought
of that van the way I imagine some kids in cities might have anticipated the
ice cream truck—at first, with excitement over their new flavors; I could
almost taste the books, their potential—and soon, with familiarity, having had
every kind, intoning which I would choose based on my mood, the color and
definition of clouds. It wasn’t long before I had read every children’s book in
the van, and moved on to YA, and then adult.

The van of books was part of the Timberland Regional Library System (TRLS). TRLS libraries serve the five Southwest Washington
counties Grays Harbor, Thurston, Mason, Lewis, and Pacific. In the late 1980s,
before TRL expanded to the 27 libraries they have today, they utilized
Bookmobiles—vans stationed in the rural-est of rural communities so children like
me could check out books, add to their growing understanding of the tangible
world.

The library van was a small castle of knowledge,
imagination, possibility. Like my natural library of plants, it held both
familiarity and the promise of something beyond that familiarity. So, when I
think of libraries, I think of vans. I think of my other kind of “library
van”—the kind that happened when my family left the valley I knew and drove
away in a VW bus made up like a small home on wheels, traveled every couple
months to make a little cash so we could keep paying our cheap ($150/month)
rent, keep living in the old farmhouse with the bathtub falling through the
floor and the fields and fields and brambles and sky and river.

I’m ten. It’s summer,
or more specifically, a summer-like fall. Our parents have pulled us from
school again, and I’m at a library in Winlock, in Raymond, in Shelton, in Elma,
in Hoquiam. It doesn’t matter which one. Whichever it is, I know this library.
They are all over Southwest Washington, in all the rural towns of the Willapa
Hills. My mother and father leave my sister and me at the library, a natural
babysitter, while they re-cover billiards tables.

For an hour or so, we sit obediently in the stacks,
reading children’s books to one another, exploring the magical realms of
endless language. But we’re children, and we wander . . . like our library van,
searching for more library vans, searching for curious lands, our hands curious
and searching for curiosities.

In one town, we find a bank with a fountain.

The fountain is full of coins!

What a joy for two children whose books are loans, whose
toys are whistle-grass and bull thistle, who live sometimes itinerant van
lives. We gather the coins into our pockets—shiny quarters, coppery pennies
like a river gleam, like lit seeds on an unmowed hay field, dimes, nickels—our
pockets full, we pitch some back and wink at the drive-through attendant who
barely believes our kindness to return what we’ve rightfully found: her mouth
open in surprise at our generosity!

Rich as queens, we duck into gift shops, buy plastic
boats, books, in a thrift shop a paper bag of lingerie for one dollar—from the
fill-a-bag-for-a-buck bin—and parade back to the bank with our boats and our
extra change we throw back in coin by coin. We wish and wish and wish and wish
for more.

I wish for a library building, a book castle. I wish for
a frosted cookie.

This is our library of monetary wealth: a bank fountain,
from which we liberate what we can, give back what we don’t use.

In another town, we are
to wait in the van. Our parents are in the tavern, and we have little toy
bears, our snacks, our books, the libraries of our imaginations. We leave it
all, except our brains. Behind us is a river, we can hear it, but we have to
navigate a steep slope lush with maples and alders, we have to scramble down to
reach the bank, a rock bar where we hop among the boulders looking for ones
where our little hips will fit. We settle on some granite lumps from which we
can see the other shore—not more than thirty feet across the river, where a
more silty/sandy gravel bar juts out in a wide arc just below the field above.

Nothing happens. We sit, we watch the river move around
its rocks.

It is as if we are thinking of which book to
choose—looking at the opposite shore, not even scanning, really—when we feel
the earth begin to vibrate, nearly imperceptible at first, so neither of us
speak of it, then noticeable, our bodies humming with the hum and us turning
toward each other, then loud like thunder and across the river a cloud of dust
and golden moving gods, their hooves and the hum and the air dust we can now
taste, its chalky presence, the cloud of these animals’ bodies—a herd of wild
horses, honey colored palominos coming down the bank, the water splashing,
their bodies unaware of us, fixed points, the whole library of horses we are
inside for only a moment, really, before it moves on, and is gone, and we
hardly believe it has been there at all except we’ve both witnessed—been
witness to, been one with, the spirit-rich reality of it. The kind of event
that, had you been alone, you wouldn’t whisper a word of to anyone, for fear it
wasn’t real, or sharing it would make it less so.

I still think of that as one of the most visceral moments
of my life, the Wordsworthian library of that moment, in which all my senses
were alive, and I knew nothing.

My mother learns from the owner of the tavern that a
family owns and keeps the land so the horses can live there. Later, I check out
a book from the library, read about wild horse herds and how they are in danger
in the west, all over America. This herd is an anomaly.

But no amount of information competes with the duende of
that moment when the wild horses were around me, or the monument my memory has
made of it since.

In the early 1990s, the rural town we then called home—where we’d had the grace of a Bookmobile—replaced the van with a funded, fixed
library building. But I still think of the van where first I worked my way
through the picture books, young adult novels, moved on to “gardens,”
eventually went off to college, where the century-old building was bricked and
cavernous and unmovable by wheels, and smelled of musty carpet-bag couches and
unwatered spider plants.
And, later, and now, with digital technology, I know I can access the world--but still when I visit a library, online or in person, I imagine it as a van full of colorful spines, stopping in the closest town, and me inside—filling my bag with books I'll then haul in our van around our little corner of the state, the state another library itself, and me a librarian, cataloguing plants and coins and wild horses and all the viscera into their little shelves of memory.

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Maya Jewell Zeller
is a poet living in Spokane, WA. Her first collection, Rust Fish, is available from Lost Horse Press. Her chapbook, Yesterday, The Bees, will be published by Floating
Bridge Press this autumn. She is the
fiction editor at Crab Creek Review and teaches at Gonzaga University. She runs
a reading series, leads workshops, gardens, and raises two children with her husband, Chris. You can enjoy these poems, "Astoria" (The Florida Review)and "My Grandmother's Cow" (Rattle). To read and learn more, visit her website: mayajewellzeller.wordpress.com/

Books by authors in the Summer Library Series will link directly to author-friendly sites, such as the press itself or to the international library search engine, Worldcat.org.Please support small publishers, independent bookstores, and our libraries.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Welcome to the inaugural post of this summer's library series! I'm pleased to showcase a third season of excellent writers and their reflections on growing up in the library. The series originated in Summer 2012, when I was awarded an Artist Trust Fellowship that gave me the time to work on my fiction and other creative projects. I grew up in a small town in Illinois, and looked forward to the annual public library summer reading program: the appearance of new colorful bookmarks on the circulation desk, the hanging of a banner of that summer's theme, and best of all, all the shiny new books that began to arrive and were set out in cardboard displays on the children's shelves but remained cloaked in sheets until the opening day. It was a wonderful anticipation to experience. But because those programs are for children, and I've left that phase in most ways, I wanted to create something that provided that same excitement for grown-ups and returned us all to the library. May you find the same excitement each Thursday when a new library reflection is released here at What She Might Think, from now through August. And may you find yourself returning to the library nearest you and supporting this important aspect of our lives. Please enjoy this reflection by novelist Simone Zelitch, whose many early books came from the circulation desk at a branch library in Philadelphia.

The Bustleton branch of the Free
Library of Philadelphia looks like a highway rest step: a single-story
structure with long, narrow windows and a corrugated green roof.It’s located next to Washington High school, which
was an easy walk from our house in Northeast Philadelphia.My mother claims that she took out fifteen
books a week for me. I never came along
which made the process more efficient, but could be the reason why I have no
early memories of libraries, no sentimental images of choosing my own read-out-loud
book and watching a librarian stamp it with the due-date.It also may explain why I couldn’t grasp that
these library books were shared property.I’d dog-ear pages, crack spines, and stain whatever I was reading with whatever
I was eating at the time.You might say
that I left my mark.

Simone hugging her "hippie sister" who now works as a digital archivist. Used with permission of author.

Things got worse when I began to
check out books on my own. I didn’t
return them.Cheap paperbacks like Paul
Zindel’s The Pigman migrated from the
library’s wire racks to my bookshelf and stayed there, along with dozens of
case studies about teenagers who drifted through a hostile world until they
finally found the person who understood them.I was that person.No one could
love those books like me.Returning
them to the library felt just plain wrong, as though I was condemning Lisa Bright and Dark or Dibs in Search of Selfto a life of abandonment and alienation.Besides, my older sister—a hippie and a
role model— had so many library fines accrued that she was actually forbidden
from ever taking out a book again, and I
had to do everything she did.In
short—though I wouldn’t have used those words when I was twelve—returning
library books felt like giving in to a conformist culture.

What was the turning point?In 1977, when I was fourteen, I actually
wanted a book that was in demand, Alex Hailey’s Roots.Did the library have
a record of all those unreturned paperbacks?Maybe not, because they put me on
a waiting list, and when my turn came, I took home a thick hardback with the
same bold cover that had appeared at the end of the opening credits of the
miniseries, and I propped it on my nightstand so it would be the first thing
I’d see when I got up in the morning.Actually,
the book wasn’t nearly as good as I thought it would be, but I did return it on
time.After all, someone had done the
same for me.

﻿﻿﻿﻿Maybe that’s when I realized that
libraries demanded a kind of social contract.Who read my nerdy paperbacks before I came along?I
looked at the call slips and saw the long strip of stamped months and dates. Eight readers had checked out I Never Promised You a Rose Garden.They were decent enough to return it so I
could get my chance to read about a schizophrenic teenager and her German
therapist.It’s romantic to imagine you’re
the only one who loves something.It’s
astounding to realize that you’re not alone.Who were the readers represented by the back-and-front eternity of
stamps on Prince Caspian or Player Piano?Who
took out Le Guin’s The Dispossessed
or Kropotkin’s Mutual Aid or just
about anything by Orwell or the autobiography of Emma Goldman?In the days before social media, it wasn’t
easy to find these people, my people,
my tribe, but the stamped cards were proof positive:That tribe existed.

It took me a long time to
understand that honoring the social contract of a library isn’t
conformist.It’s countercultural.In a
consumer society, libraries aren’t about what we own; they’re about what we
share.Given this understanding, when I
look through my own crammed bookshelves, what should I do when I come across a copy
of Then Again, Maybe I Won’t that was
due on March 12, 1973? Should I return
it?Probably.

Simone writing in her room, 1978
Used with permission of author

*

﻿

Cover of Zelitch's novel, Waveland.

Simone Zelitch has published four novels, most recently Waveland. Earlier work includes The Confession of Jack Straw, Moses in Sinai, and Louisa which was the recipient of the Goldberg Prize in Emerging Jewish Fiction. Her work has also appeared in The Lost Tribe Anthology and has been featured in the NPR broadcast and the published anthology Hanukah Lights. Recent honors include a National Endowment for the Arts Grant in Fiction, and residences at the Edward Albee Barn and Yaddo. She established a Creative Writing program at Community College of Philadelphia and currently coordinates their new Degree in English. A new novel, Judenstaat, is forthcoming from Tor books in Summer 2016. Visit her website here: simonezelitch.com.

Books by authors in the Summer Library Series will link directly to author-friendly sites, such as the press itself or to the international library search engine, Worldcat.org.Please support small publishers, independent bookstores, and our libraries.

And it's almost time for the Summer Library Series here at What She Might Think, where writers from around the world reflect on their childhood experiences in the library--from the non-experience to the befuddled experience to the awful experience.

I'm lining up the writers we'll begin hearing from in July. But until then, like any good fan, please enjoy the summers' past writers as you prepare for the writers who are in the wings, typing.

Sunday, March 15, 2015

My story "How The Sun Burns Among Hills of Rock and Pebble" is now available as a chapbook from The Head and The Hand Press, a fantastic craft publisher in Philadelphia.

To get a copy:
A) If you're in Philadelphia, you can pick up a copy from a vending machine in Elixir Coffee.
B) If you'd like a signed copy, I have some available in the stash that follows me to readings/signings.

Set in the rural Midwest, "How The Sun Burns Among Hills of Rock and Pebble" follows a girl whose sister Helen disappeared the previous year, during the county fair.

It was published originally in The Minnesota Review, nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and was a finalist in the Kore Press Short Fiction Award. The judge of that award, Karen Brennan, said this about the story:

"What I most admire about this fine story is the author’s ability to render hyper-dramatic—almost gothic-- material with a beautifully orchestrated lyricism that never over-reaches itself. Indeed, the story of the young girl grieving for her murdered sister is made even more poignant for its distant, almost oracular point of view, a point of view that allows the reader to glimpse not only the protagonist’s confusion and sorrow, but also the indifferent, soulless landscape in which she wanders. A little Cormac McCarthy, a little Carson McCullers, “How the SunBurns” is full of dense atmosphere, apocalyptic overtones and heart."

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

National Novel Writing Month has ended again, and it's time to start shaping all those words into the novel you wanted to write and the novel we want to read. But where to begin and how to presume? Probably not by querying an agent, or asking for advice from your best friend--who doesn't like to read anyway, or by beginning to circle your typos on page one.

Instead, join your fellow writers in the Revision Workshop I'm leading at theNorth Spokane Librarythis Saturday, December 6, from 2-3 PM. We'll discuss ways to re-vision your manuscript, how to think about the revising process, and take part in a hands-on activity to make you feel more confident in the editor's chair.

The workshop is free and open to all interested fiction writers, regardless of genre.

North Spokane Library

44 E. Hawthorne Rd

Spokane, WA 99218

For information about this and other cool classes offered at Spokane County Libraries, see the schedule. See you on Saturday!